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   <title>The Distributist Review</title>
   <link>http://distributistreview.org</link>
   <description>A Journal of Distributism</description>
   <language>en</language>
   <copyright>Copyright 2008 Bill Powell</copyright>
   <ttl>60</ttl>
   <pubDate>Sat, 28 Jun 2008 01:38 GMT</pubDate>
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   <title>Welcome to <em>The Distributist Review</em>!</title>
   <guid isPermaLink="false">welcome</guid>
   <link>http://distributistreview.org/welcome.html</link>
   <description><![CDATA[
<p>Welcome! <em>The Distributist Review</em> is a new journal for
people who want to have serious discussions on the practice and theory of
Distributism. The <em>Review</em> will appear in print four
times a year, and most of the content (though not <em>quite</em>
all) will also be available on this web site.</p>

<p>What is Distributism? In part, that's the
<a href="/mission">mission</a> of this journal; to find a satisfactory
definition. For now, here's one approach: <strong>distributism</strong>
is an economic theory which aims at a society where the
average adult <em>owns</em> enough private property to support
himself or herself. That means not only owning your own home
(<em>real</em> ownership, not a 30-year lease from the bank), but
also owning the tools by which you create your wealth. They
might be a video camera, a llama, or a share in the factory
where you work, but in some way, you own them. No one can
fire you.</p>

<p>(Here's a longer <a href="/dtbm-defined">definition</a>.)</p>

<p>Sound good? Sadly, the real economy is rather more
complicated than good intentions. And that is what this
journal is for; to get to work, and figure out how to make this
happen.</p>

]]></description>
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   <pubDate>Sat, 28 Jun 2008 01:38 GMT</pubDate>
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   <title>Current Status</title>
   <guid isPermaLink="false">status</guid>
   <link>http://distributistreview.org/status.html</link>
   <description><![CDATA[
<p>I've received most (but not all) of the articles for the
<strong>first issue</strong>, and we're working on revisions.</p>

<p>I'm going to <strong>wait on taking subscriptions</strong> until
I have things lined up with the printing company. 
But you can subscribe to the <a href="/feed/rss20">RSS</a> or
<a href="/feed/atom">Atom</a> feed if you'd like to stay posted.
(I'll be editing this post, so be sure your aggregator pays
attention to edited entries.)</p>

<p>Please <a href="/contact">contact</a> me if you have any questions or
suggestions, and do check out the <a href="/sbns">guidelines</a> if
you'd like to contribute! I hope to hear from you.</p>

]]></description>
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   <pubDate>Sat, 28 Jun 2008 01:38 GMT</pubDate>
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<item>
   <title>Submissions</title>
   <guid isPermaLink="false">sbns</guid>
   <link>http://distributistreview.org/sbns.html</link>
   <description><![CDATA[
<p>As you might expect here at the <em>Distributist Review</em>, we're
looking for top-quality articles about any topic that is
likely to interest Distributists. That's a broad field.</p>

<h2>Schedule</h2>

<p>We're on a quarterly schedule. Submit any time you like.
The chart shows you the earliest that your article will
appear.</p>

<pre><code>         Submit by   Revise by   Published
        --------------------------------------
Spring   Nov 1       Dec 1       Mar 1
Summer   Feb 1       Mar 1       Jun 1
Fall     May 1       Jun 1       Sep 1
Winter   Aug 1       Sep 1       Dec 1
</code></pre>

<h2>Topic</h2>

<p>While we will likely have editorial themes in the future, at
present the ground is wide open. I welcome any topic which
you think relevant to Distributism, e.g, backyard gardening,
the significance of blogging, commentary on the Cuban
post-petroleum economy, the case from Church documents that
a "living wage" is a non-negotiable element of Catholic
social doctrine, indigenous "food forests" in South America,
the communal architecture of the average medieval city--and
that's just off the top of my head. I'm excited to see what
you want to say.</p>

<p><strong>I suggest that you query first.</strong> There's a chance we're already
covering that topic this issue.</p>

<p><strong>We're primarily interested in nonfiction.</strong> The only
possible exceptions might be <strong>humorous poetry</strong> or
<strong>cartoons</strong>, or of course <strong>photos</strong> or <strong>gorgeous artwork</strong>. Anything else, I fear, will be a waste of
postage and bandwidth.</p>

<h2>Length</h2>

<p>is flexible, with <strong>3,000 to 5,000 preferred</strong> and an upper limit hovering around
<strong>10,000</strong> words. Shorter pieces of <strong>1,000</strong> or even <strong>500</strong> words are also
welcome; perhaps you could have a regular column.</p>

<h2>Style</h2>

<p>Though we're not associated with an academic
institution yet, many readers will expect bibliographies
and/or footnotes with something approximating the rigor of
an academic journal. I say "approximating" because we don't
want to be excessive either. Depending on the subject,
citations may not even be needed. True, Chesterton was
rather allergic to footnotes, but this wasn't entirely to
the good.  At a minimum, direct quotations, statistics,
startling paraphrases ("St. Thomas actually says..."), and
in general any "controversial" facts should have citations.</p>

<p>On the other hand, we Distributists have a rich heritage of
men and women writing on serious topics in a voice that
their fellow humans might actually want to read. I suggest
the best of both worlds: citing anything an opponent might
challenge, and writing so well they wouldn't even think to
do so.</p>

<h2>Submission Format</h2>

<p>is up to you. If you write on your
computer, please email me the file. However, getting
typewritten or (legible) handwritten manuscripts in the mail
would be a treat.</p>

<p>I can pry open just about any file format, but if you can
save your file in Rich Text Format (RTF extension), we may
save time. Any submissions in TeX or LaTeX will warrant
tears of joy (I've already received one).</p>

<h2>Send to:</h2>

<p><a href="&#x6D;a&#x69;&#x6C;&#116;&#x6F;:&#x65;&#100;&#x69;&#116;&#x6F;r&#x40;d&#105;&#x73;&#x74;&#x72;i&#x62;&#117;&#116;&#x69;&#x73;&#x74;&#114;&#101;&#118;&#x69;&#101;&#119;&#46;&#x6F;r&#103;">&#x65;&#100;&#x69;&#116;&#x6F;r&#x40;d&#105;&#x73;&#x74;&#x72;i&#x62;&#117;&#116;&#x69;&#x73;&#x74;&#114;&#101;&#118;&#x69;&#101;&#119;&#46;&#x6F;r&#103;</a></p>

<p>or <strong>include a SASE</strong> and mail to:</p>

<pre><code>Bill Powell
The Distributist Review
P. O. Box 594
Lafayette, IN
47901
</code></pre>

<h2>Payment</h2>

<p>Well, I haven't started poking around for corporate
sponsors. :) Thanks to print-on-demand technology, the
subscription price will actually cover the printing and
shipping costs. We will have a few advertisers, but at first
we'll probably exchange their ads for ad space in their
venues. We'll also be taking donations, as soon as we can
scrounge up $2000 or so to start a non-profit.</p>

<p>So at present, your contributions will be your generous
gift. In the long term, I aim to have enough advertisers and
subscriptions to pay contributors at least a respectable
honorarium. But I can at least get the ball rolling by
offering a <strong>complimentary copy or a $10 honorarium</strong>, whichever
you prefer. You'll have our thanks here below and treasure
in Heaven.</p>

<h2>Licensing</h2>

<p>Certainly, you keep the copyright to your work. We'll get
the usual first serial rights. I'd also request nonexclusive
reprint rights, as well as the right to offer your articles
online. I don't plan to release every article online right
away, but my goal is to have each back issue fully and
freely available online after 6 months or so. We need more 
quality Distributist literature online!</p>

<p>I encourage you to consider an alternative license that
distributes more rights to the reader, e.g., the Creative
Commons License. If possible, I'd like to have the whole
Review under at least the first, most restrictive, license:
<strong><a href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/">Attribution, Non-Commercial, No
Derivatives</a></strong>
(<a href="http://creativecommons.org/about/licenses/meet-the-licenses">read
more</a>).</p>

<p>This is just what it sounds like: to copy your work, a
person must attribute you as author, charge no money, and
keep your words intact. You keep your copyright (e.g., to
make money by publication), but your work can spread freely.
Of course, you can choose a <em>less</em> restrictive license if
you like.</p>

<p>I understand that these may seem like uncharted waters, so
I'm not going to force this license on anyone. But it seems
especially appropriate to periodicals in general, and our
work in particular.</p>

<p>Finally,</p>

<h2>Thank you</h2>

<p>for considering a contribution to the <em>Distributist Review</em>!</p>

]]></description>
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   <pubDate>Sat, 14 Jun 2008 23:18 GMT</pubDate>
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   <title>Distributism Defined</title>
   <guid isPermaLink="false">dtbm-defined</guid>
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   <description><![CDATA[
<p><span class="blurb"> How did the Distributist League define "Distributism"? </span>&nbsp;&nbsp;<span class="readmore"><a href="http://distributistreview.org/dtbm-defined">more &raquo;</a></span></p>
]]></description>
   <category domain="http://distributistreview.org"></category>
   <pubDate>Sat, 14 Jun 2008 22:56 GMT</pubDate>
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   <title>Contact</title>
   <guid isPermaLink="false">contact</guid>
   <link>http://distributistreview.org/contact.html</link>
   <description><![CDATA[
<p><a href="&#x6D;&#x61;&#x69;&#108;&#x74;o:&#x65;&#x64;&#105;t&#x6F;&#x72;&#64;&#100;&#105;&#115;&#x74;&#114;&#x69;&#x62;&#x75;&#116;&#105;&#x73;&#x74;&#x72;&#x65;&#118;&#x69;&#x65;&#119;&#46;o&#x72;&#103;">&#x65;&#x64;&#105;t&#x6F;&#x72;&#64;&#100;&#105;&#115;&#x74;&#114;&#x69;&#x62;&#x75;&#116;&#105;&#x73;&#x74;&#x72;&#x65;&#118;&#x69;&#x65;&#119;&#46;o&#x72;&#103;</a></p>

<pre><code>Bill Powell
The Distributist Review
P. O. Box 594
Lafayette, IN
47901
</code></pre>

<p>See our <a href="/sbns">submission guidelines</a> if you'd like to contribute.</p>

]]></description>
   <category domain="http://distributistreview.org"></category>
   <pubDate>Sat, 14 Jun 2008 21:30 GMT</pubDate>
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